

This small bronze figure, softened into near-primordial contours, proposes the human body less as anatomy than as an accumulating memory of touch and time. The oxidized greens and burnished browns read like weathered skin and earth, allowing light to pool on rounded shoulders and dissolve into shadowed hollows where identity becomes intentionally unnamed. Rising from a grounded base, the vertical lift of the head suggests quiet enduranceβan inward gaze that turns solitude into a monumental presence. In its compression and weight, the sculpture holds a tender paradox: intimacy rendered as mass, vulnerability made durable.







